My company hosts online educational programs in the form of Webinars. Before I began my employment, the standard practice was to encourage participants to register for the "live" program, so as to ask questions of the presenter, etc. However, after the program was complete, it was physically burned to a CD-ROM and marketed online as a product to be ordered and mailed to the customer.
To keep up with the times, we have ditched the physical CD and switched instead to a third-party hosted, audio/video recording for purchase after the program is concluded.
What verbiage is recommended to ensure the security of our product? The content is presenter-driven but our company owns the rights to all materials once we host it. We want to ensure that no customer takes the link to the recording we sell them and then sell it in turn to others for profit.
Additionally, the link to the recording of the program expires at a set date. We do not want to be held responsible for the user not taking care to download the file from the third-party host before expiration of the link and, therefore, the file.
To keep up with the times, we have ditched the physical CD and switched instead to a third-party hosted, audio/video recording for purchase after the program is concluded.
What verbiage is recommended to ensure the security of our product? The content is presenter-driven but our company owns the rights to all materials once we host it. We want to ensure that no customer takes the link to the recording we sell them and then sell it in turn to others for profit.
Additionally, the link to the recording of the program expires at a set date. We do not want to be held responsible for the user not taking care to download the file from the third-party host before expiration of the link and, therefore, the file.